Work it in order. Recall first, from memory, before you flip back. Then the matching drill, then the field scenario, then your Riverside drawing package.
Short answers, from memory. These are the ideas the whole lesson turns on.
1. Name the one callout most often left off the sheet, and the trade that programs from it.
2. Name the single discipline that surfaces what's missing before the drawing is released. When do you run it?
3. When a vendor prices only what was in the RFQ and a scope gap surfaces after award, who owns the gap, and where does the cost come from?
Ten items that belong on the installation drawing. For each one, mark the trade that reads it. Some items need more than one trade, so mark every one that applies.
| Drawing callout | Trade that needs it |
|---|---|
| Equipment layout with dimensions and clearances | MEC |
| Belt speeds and gap expectations | MEC |
| Sensor locations with mounting angles | MEC |
| Pull cord E-stop path | MEC |
| Underside cover specs and locations | MEC |
| Aux I/O module locations | MEC |
| PLC delay values at transfer points | MEC |
| Safety gate interlock locations and switch type | MEC |
| Power requirements and disconnect locations | MEC |
| Accumulation zone release mode callouts | MEC |
Read it, then write your answer in the lines. Pull the specific detail that drives your call.
Mobilization is in four days. The mechanical installer has reviewed your drawing and signed off. The controls team hasn't answered your two emails, and the project manager wants the package released today. Name what you release, what you hold, and the specific drawing items at risk if controls never sees it before the crew arrives.